Woven by Water: Histories from the Whanganui River

Front Cover
Huia Publishers, 1998 - History - 323 pages

"The Mana of the Maori is by water. No one, here, carrying the same thing that I'm carrying today." --Titi Tihu

In living memory, before the Whanganui River became a tawny mass seeming to flow upside down, the river bed was clean stone and the water of the river "tasted like kowhai. The trees used to grow over the river and drop into the water, and the water tasted like kowhai."

This is a book of many river people--a "hidden" prophet, living with over a thousand followers at a place now deserted; a Pakeha-Maori, making gunpowder using charcoal made from willows grown from cuttings taken from Napoleon's grave; a riverboat magnate, building a fiefdom on 'the Rhine of Maoriland'; a highly decorated soldier, fighting as a kupapa yet fighting for tino rangatiratanga; arsenic and flour poisoners--and always, the river itself.

From inside the book

Contents

CROSSINGS
1
HE ARA WAKA
14
BAPTISMS
27
MIDSTREAM
51
HE MATAPIHI
74
GATHERINGS
98
HE POROPITI
123
BETRAYAL
156
TUNA
178
CLEARINGS
191
TE
226
POWERS
247
NOTES
264
BIBLIOGRAPHY
298
INDEX
309
Copyright

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About the author (1998)

David Young is a respected writer, commentator, journalist, environmentalist, and historian. Working independently in the field of history and the environment he work explores the nature-culture relationship, including perspectives from indigenous nature and indigenous culture.

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